One Stop News
OSE Begins Work at Powell School Timberline stream under restoration Birmingham companies make Inc. 5000 list Business owners share concerns as tornado recovery continues Woodlawn business in tornado cleanup Tornado cleanup starts with sorting, moves to hauling today OSE ranks #29 among 100 fastest growing inner city businesses One Stop Environmental among fastest growing inner city firms Shannon Riley’s environmental remediation success is no accident One Stop Environmental CEO Creates Employee Volunteer Program The 25 Fastest-Growing Inner-City Companies, 2010 One Stop ranked in 2010 Inc. 5000 Shannon Riley featured in the MyScoop Chic List Top 40: Shannon Riley One Stop Environmental opens Huntsville office One Stop #1 Fastest Growing Small Business in Birmingham Three lines of business take One Stop to the top SBA Success Story- One Stop Environmental, LLC. Riley's One Stop posts 182 percent revenue growth Inc. 5000- 2007 Fastest Growing Private Companies in America Fox 6- A Dirty Job One Stop Awarded 8(a) status Birmingham Business Journal - Cleaning the hazardous mess BBB Reliability Report for One Stop Environmental, LLCOSE Begins Work at Powell School
Next steps to save Powell School underway
02.1.2012 by Andre Natta · No Comments
Folks driving into downtown Birmingham, AL the morning of February 1 may have noticed a dumpster sitting out in front of the historic Powell School Building along 6th Avenue North. It’s OK if the rain might have kept you from noticing…
It appears that workers from One Stop Environmental have begun to remove debris from the city’s oldest school a little more than a year after a devastating fire did significant damage to it. The property was donated to the Alabama Trust for Historic Preservation along with $500,000 back in October. The building had been named to the organization’s 2011 list of Places in Peril in May. The city’s requested that $150,000 be reserved to cover the cost of demolition in the event that a developer is not located that views the project as feasible.
According to the request for proposals retrieved from Operation New Birmingham’s website, submissions were due on January 9. A story published in The Birmingham News during the holidays suggests that the stabilization project is on schedule enabling potential developers to access the property for review in March. It was also reported that work was underway to design a roof to protect the remaining structure from any more damage due to weather.
